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Legume
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A fruit that is derived from a single carpel, dehisces along two sutures, and is usually dry and several-seeded. Although most species of the legume family possess legumes, a number of them do not (e.g., species of Andira). |
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Lemma
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The lower of the two bracts that enclose the floret of the Poaceae, located above the glumes. Compare with palea. |
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Lenticel
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A spongy area in the bark of roots, trunks, and stems and the pericarp of fruits that allows the interchange of gases. Lenticels are the equivalent of stomates in leaves. |
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Lenticel (adj. = lenticellate)
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A spongy area in the bark of roots, trunks, and stems that allows the interchange of gases with the environment. |
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Lenticellate
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Possessing lenticels. |
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Lenticellate
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Possessing lenticels. |
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Lepidote
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Covered with small, peltate scales. |
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Leptocaul
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A type of growth form in which the tree is branched many times and the stems and leaves are not unusually large. |
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Leptocaul (leptocaulous)
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A type of growth form in which the tree is branched many times and the stems and leaves are not unusually large. Most trees on the Osa have this type of growth form. |
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Liana
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A woody climbing plant. Same as woody climber; compare with vine. |
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Lígula no enrollada
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Se refiere a la lígula de las Lecythidaceae que no está enrollada hacia el interior. En la Península de Osa, este tipo de lígula solamente se conoce en Lecythis mesophylla. Esta especie presenta estambres rudimentarios dirigidos hacia el interior, pero su lígula no se encuentra enrollada hacia el interior, como sucede en las especies de Eschweilera y Couratari. En L. mesophylla, la capucha es la parte de la lígula que porta los estambres rudimentarios. |
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Ligular sulcus
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A groove or furrow close to the point where the androecial hood begins, i.e., between the appendix-free ligule and the androecial hood. |
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Ligulate capitulum (head)
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Inflorescence of Asteraceae with only ligulate flowers. |
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Ligulate flower
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A zygomorphic flower with a straplike corolla found in the Asteraceae tribe Lactuceae. Differring from a ray flower by having five instead of three lobes. |
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Ligule
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A prolongation of the staminal ring from the abaxial side of a flower (Tsou & Mori, 2007) in zygomorphic-flowered species of Lecythidaceae. |
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Ligule
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Ligules are strap-like structures that can arise from different structures; for example, the ligule of a species of Bromeliaceae arises from petals; whereas that of a grass arises at the juncture of the blade sheath and the leaf blade and the ligule of a flower of Lecythidaceae arises from fusion of stamens. |
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Ligule arched
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The ligule departs from the staminal ring and is curved for its entire length or, in other words the ligule curves downward from the middle to both its attachment to the staminal ring and to its distal end. |
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Ligule coiled
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Referring to a ligule of Lecythidaceae that coils inward one or more times. In species with coiled ligules, the coiled part with the vestigial stamens is called the androecial hood. Species of Eschweilera and Couratari are the only species that have coiled ligules and they are the only species that have nectaries hypothesized to be derived from vestigial stamens. |
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Ligule flat
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A ligule that arches at its departure from the staminal ring and then levels off, in other words the part that is flat is the part that covers the summit of the ovary which also equals the androecial hood. |
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Ligule not coiled
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Referring to a ligule of Lecythidaceae that does not make a full coil inward. On the Osa Peninsula only Lecythis mesophylla is known to have this type of ligule. It does, however, have vestigial stamens that are swept inward but they do not form a complete coils as found in species of Eschweilera and Couratari. In L. mesophylla, the hood is the part of the ligule that possesses vestigial stamens. |
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Ligule undulate
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A liguler that is similar to flat but is undulate along its length. The most important feature of this ligule shape is that the ligule is not undulate for its entire length. |
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Ligule: Couroupita nicaraguarensis-Type
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The androecium is prolonged from one side of the staminal ring into a ligule that is covered with stamens and staminodes without interruption from the staminal ring to the apex of the ligule, i.e., there is no appendage free ligule and there is no well-differentiated hood. There is, however, a progressive increase in staminodes from the staminal ring to the end of the ligule such that all appendages in the staminal ring are stamens and most appendages at the end of the ligule are staminodes. There are no antherless appendages on the ligule. |
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Line of opercular dehiscence
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A circular sulcus around the summit of the ovary which indicates the place where the operculum will fall from the base of the fruit. |
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Linear
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Referring to a two dimensional shape in which the greatest width extends throughout a middle zone at least one-third the length of the blade (in this zone the margins are more-or-less parallel) and the length to width ratio is 10:1 or more. |
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Lip
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The median petal of Orchidaceae which is usually highly modified and different from the two lateral petals, the lip of orchids often plays a crucial role in the plant's pollination; one of the two divisions of a bilabiate corolla, e.g., in the Lamiaceae. |
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